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"It goes beyond good camaraderie": A qualitative study of the process of becoming an interprofessional healthcare "teamlet".
J Interprof Care. 2016 May; 30(3):295-300.JI

Abstract

Within the US, the patient-centred medical home has become a predominant model in the delivery of primary care. This model requires a shift from the physician-centric model to an interprofessional team-based approach. Thus, healthcare staff are being reorganized into teams, resulting in having to work and relate to one another in new ways. In 2010, the Veterans Health Administration implemented the patient aligned care team (PACT) model, its version of the patient-centred medical home. The transition to the PACT model involved restructuring primary care staff into "teamlets", consisting of a registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, and administrative clerk for each full-time-equivalent primary care provider. This qualitative study used observation and semi-structured interviews to understand the factors that affect teamlet functioning as they implement this new model of care and how teams are interacting to address those factors. Findings suggest that role understanding includes understanding how each teamlet member's tasks are performed in the daily operations of the clinic. In addition, willingness to perform tasks that benefit the teamlet and acceptance of delegation from all teamlet members were found to be important for teamlet functioning and cohesion. In order for healthcare teams to provide patient-centred care, it is important to provide guidance and support about what these new relationships and roles will entail. The building of team relationships is not a static process; ways of working together build over time and, therefore, should be seen as a continuous cycle of quality improvement.

Authors+Show Affiliations

a VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System , Ann Arbor , Michigan , USA.a VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System , Ann Arbor , Michigan , USA.a VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System , Ann Arbor , Michigan , USA.a VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System , Ann Arbor , Michigan , USA. b Department of Internal Medicine , University of Michigan , Ann Arbor , Michigan , USA.a VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System , Ann Arbor , Michigan , USA. b Department of Internal Medicine , University of Michigan , Ann Arbor , Michigan , USA.a VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System , Ann Arbor , Michigan , USA.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27028059

Citation

Harrod, Molly, et al. ""It Goes Beyond Good Camaraderie": a Qualitative Study of the Process of Becoming an Interprofessional Healthcare "teamlet"." Journal of Interprofessional Care, vol. 30, no. 3, 2016, pp. 295-300.
Harrod M, Weston LE, Robinson C, et al. "It goes beyond good camaraderie": A qualitative study of the process of becoming an interprofessional healthcare "teamlet". J Interprof Care. 2016;30(3):295-300.
Harrod, M., Weston, L. E., Robinson, C., Tremblay, A., Greenstone, C. L., & Forman, J. (2016). "It goes beyond good camaraderie": A qualitative study of the process of becoming an interprofessional healthcare "teamlet". Journal of Interprofessional Care, 30(3), 295-300. https://doi.org/10.3109/13561820.2015.1130028
Harrod M, et al. "It Goes Beyond Good Camaraderie": a Qualitative Study of the Process of Becoming an Interprofessional Healthcare "teamlet". J Interprof Care. 2016;30(3):295-300. PubMed PMID: 27028059.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - "It goes beyond good camaraderie": A qualitative study of the process of becoming an interprofessional healthcare "teamlet". AU - Harrod,Molly, AU - Weston,Lauren E, AU - Robinson,Claire, AU - Tremblay,Adam, AU - Greenstone,Clinton L, AU - Forman,Jane, Y1 - 2016/03/30/ PY - 2016/3/31/entrez PY - 2016/3/31/pubmed PY - 2017/6/9/medline KW - Case study KW - coaching KW - interprofessional team KW - patient-centred practice KW - primary care KW - qualitative method SP - 295 EP - 300 JF - Journal of interprofessional care JO - J Interprof Care VL - 30 IS - 3 N2 - Within the US, the patient-centred medical home has become a predominant model in the delivery of primary care. This model requires a shift from the physician-centric model to an interprofessional team-based approach. Thus, healthcare staff are being reorganized into teams, resulting in having to work and relate to one another in new ways. In 2010, the Veterans Health Administration implemented the patient aligned care team (PACT) model, its version of the patient-centred medical home. The transition to the PACT model involved restructuring primary care staff into "teamlets", consisting of a registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, and administrative clerk for each full-time-equivalent primary care provider. This qualitative study used observation and semi-structured interviews to understand the factors that affect teamlet functioning as they implement this new model of care and how teams are interacting to address those factors. Findings suggest that role understanding includes understanding how each teamlet member's tasks are performed in the daily operations of the clinic. In addition, willingness to perform tasks that benefit the teamlet and acceptance of delegation from all teamlet members were found to be important for teamlet functioning and cohesion. In order for healthcare teams to provide patient-centred care, it is important to provide guidance and support about what these new relationships and roles will entail. The building of team relationships is not a static process; ways of working together build over time and, therefore, should be seen as a continuous cycle of quality improvement. SN - 1469-9567 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27028059/"It_goes_beyond_good_camaraderie":_A_qualitative_study_of_the_process_of_becoming_an_interprofessional_healthcare_"teamlet"_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -